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BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES

BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES. Pamela S. Hyde, J.D. SAMHSA Administrator. American Correctional Association Denver, CO • July 21, 2012. INTERSECTION: BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE. 1/2 of Incarcerated People Have MH Problems

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BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES

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  1. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES Pamela S. Hyde, J.D. SAMHSA Administrator American Correctional Association Denver, CO • July 21, 2012

  2. INTERSECTION:BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE • 1/2 of Incarcerated People Have MH Problems • 60 Percent Have SUDs • 1/3 Have Both

  3. CORRECTIONAL BEHAVIORAL HEALTH IS COMMUNITY HEALTH ~ ⅔ of People in Prison Meet Criteria for SUDs, Yet < 15 Percent Receive Treatment After Admission 24 Percent of Individuals in State Prisons Have Recent History of MI, Yet Only 34 Percent Receive Treatment After Admission ~ 700,000 Federal and State Prisoners Released to Communities in U.S. Every Year

  4. BEHAVIORAL HEALTHIMPACT ON PHYSICAL HEALTH

  5. PREVALENCE OF BH CO-MORBIDITIES(MEDICAID-ONLY BENEFICIARIES W/DISABILITIES) Boyd, C., Clark, R., Leff, B., Richards, T., Weiss, C., Wolff, J. (2011, August). Clarifying Multimorbidity for Medicaid Programs to Improve Targeting and Delivering Clinical Services. Presented to SAMHSA, Rockville, MD.

  6. PREMATURE DEATH AND DISABILITY CDC, National Vital Statistics Report People with M/SUDs are nearly 2x as likely as general population to die prematurely, (8.2 years younger) often of preventable or treatable causes (95.4% medical causes) More deaths from M/SUDs than HIV, traffic accidents , and breast cancer combined More deaths from suicide than from HIV or homicides Half the deaths from tobacco use are among persons with M/SUDs

  7. HEALTH REFORM: THE JUSTICE POPULATION

  8. 2014 – more AMERICANS WILL have HEALTH coverage OPPORTUNITIES • Currently, 37.9 million are uninsured <400% FPL* • 18.0 M – Medicaid expansion eligible • 19.9 M – ACA exchange eligible** • 11.019 M (29%) – Have BH condition(s) • * Source: 2010 NSDUH • **Eligible for premium tax credits and not eligible for Medicaid

  9. ESSENTIAL HEALTH BENEFITS (EHB) 10 BENEFIT CATEGORIES • Ambulatory patient services • Emergency services • Hospitalization • Maternity and newborn care • Mental health and substance use disorder services, including behavioral health treatment • Prescription drugs • Rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices • Laboratory services • Preventive and wellness services and chronic disease management • Pediatric services, including oral and vision care

  10. ACA & JUSTICE INVOLVED POPULATIONS ① Coverage expansion means individuals in/after jails and prisons (generally w/o health insurance) will now have more opportunity for coverage – exchanges while in; Medicaid expansion upon re-entry CJ population w/ comparatively high rates of M/SUDs = opportunity to coordinate new health coverage w/other efforts to ↑ successful transitions Addressing BH needs can ↓ recidivism and ↓ expenditures in CJ system while ↑ public health and safety outcomes SAMHSA and partners working to develop standards and improve coordination around coverage expansions

  11. FOCUS: ENROLLMENT ACTIVITIES • Consumer Enrollment Assistance (thru BRSS TACS) • Outreach/public education • Enrollment/re-determination assistance • Plan comparison and selection • Grievance procedures • Eligibility/enrollment communication materials • Enrollment Assistance Best Practices TA – Toolkits • Communication Strategy – Message Testing, Outreach to Stakeholder Groups, Webinars/Training Opportunities • SOAR Changes to Address New Environment • Data Work with ASPE and CMS

  12. TRAUMA-INFORMED SYSTEMS

  13. UNDERSTANDING TRAUMA • Event(s) • Exposure to violence, victimization including sexual, physical abuse, severe neglect, loss, domestic violence, witnessing of violence, disasters • Experience • Intense fear of/ threat to physical or psychological safety and integrity, helplessness; intense emotional pain and distress • Effects • Stress that overwhelms capacity to cope and manifests in physical, psychological, and neuro-physiological responses

  14. PREVALENCE OF TRAUMA IN JUSTICE-INVOLVED POPULATIONS About ¼ of State Prisoners (27 Percent) and Jail Inmates (24 Percent) w/ MH Problems Reported Past Physical or Sexual Abuse Youth in Residential Treatment – 70 Percent Have Past Traumatic Experience With 30 Percent Physical and/or Sexual Abuse (OJJDP) 43-80 Percent of Individuals in Psychiatric Hospitals Have Experienced Physical or Sexual Abuse 51-90 Percent Public MH Clients Exposed to Trauma ⅔ Adults in SUD Treatment Report Child Abuse/Neglect

  15. TRAUMA-INFORMED SERVICES IN THE JUSTICE SYSTEM (GAINS Center) • Align Opportunities for Change at Each of 5-Intercept Points: • Law Enforcement (Crisis intervention training, avoid re-traumatizing, e.g., de-escalation; strip searches) • Initial Detention/Court Hearings (screen for trauma; gather trauma histories; what happened to you?) • Jails/Courts (avoid re-traumatizing behaviors; demeaning, disempowering; personnel training on trauma; provide trauma-specific tx ) • Reentry (ensure trauma-informed peer support, transition planning with trauma interventions) • Community Corrections (trauma training for parole and probation officers; link with community trauma services/supports)

  16. PREVENTION

  17. YOUTH, JUVENILE JUSTICE AND BEHAVIORAL HEALTH ~2 million Youth Arrested Each Year 600,000 Through Juvenile Detention Centers; more than 93,000 Put in Secure Juvenile Correction Facilities Majority Have M/SUDs Prevalence Rates as High as 66 Percent w/ 95 Percent Experiencing Functional Impairment 56 Percent of Boys and 40 Percent of Girls Tested Positive for Drug Use at Time of Arrest (NIDA)

  18. EARLY INTERVENTION REDUCES IMPACT • ½ of All Lifetime Cases of Mental Illness Begin by Age 14; ¾ by Age 24 • On Average, > 6 Years from Onset of Symptoms of M/Suds to Treatment • Effective Multi-Sectoral Interventions & Treatments Exist • Need Treatment and Support Earlier • Screening • Brief interventions • Coordinated referrals

  19. SAMHSA PREVENTION PRIORITIES • SA Prevention & Emotional Health Development • Suicide • Underage Drinking • Prescription Drug Abuse

  20. DIVERSION

  21. JAIL DIVERSION: GETTING RESULTS • Jail Diversion Works – Those Diverted: • Use less alcohol and drugs (last 30 days) • Any alcohol use: baseline 59 percent vs. 6 months 28 percent • Alcohol to intoxication: baseline 38 percent vs. 6 months 13 percent • Illegal drug use: baseline 58 percent vs. 6 months 17 percent • Fewer arrests after diversion compared to 12 months before (2.4 v 1.3) • Fewer jail days (52 vs 41) • Improved quality of life with fewer symptoms • ¾ Jail Diversion Programs Keep Operating After Federal $ • Courts = Post-Arrest or Post-Conviction Diversion • ~ 2400 Drug Cts, 300 MH Cts, 80 Veterans Cts

  22. GETTING UPSTREAM: PRE-BOOKING DIVERSION Identified for Diversion by Police; Before Formal Charges Occurs at Point of Contact w/ Law Enforcement Officers Relies Heavily on Effective Interactions Between Police and Community MH/SA Services Characterized by Specialized Training for Police Officers and a 24-hour Crisis Drop-off Center with No-refusal Policy Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) Model Collaboration Between Police and Specially-trained MH Providers Who Co-Respond to Calls Involving a Potential MH Health Crisis

  23. EXAMPLE: PRE-BOOKING DIVERSION PROGRAM

  24. ACCOLADES: BEXAR COUNTY JAIL DIVERSION PROGRAM IN SAN ANTONIO, TX (2002) Received SAMHSA TCE Jail Diversion grant and Jail Diversion and Trauma Recovery Program – Priority to Veterans Grant Replication and/or Consultation Underway in All 50 States and in China, Mexico, Australia, England, and Canada Received Gold Achievement Award for Community-Based Programs from American Psychiatric Association Received Program for Service Excellence Award from National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare A SAMHSA National Model Program

  25. BEXAR COUNTY PARTNERS Consumers and families City, State and County Government County Hospital District University, Local and Private Hospitals Criminal /Civil Courts, including Probation Departments Advocacy – NAMI San Antonio State Hospital Mental Health Partners Adult Protective Services Child Protective Services Military Entities EMS System

  26. TOOLKITgainscenter.samhsa.gov Blueprint for Success: The Bexar County Model How to set up a jail diversion program in your community • Impacts/Influences CJ/MH System at 46 Intervention Points – “No Wrong Door” • Trains Practitioners; Educates Policy Makers, Defense Attorneys Community • Shares Resources – 34 Different Partners • Judges, County Sheriffs Office, Police Department, Health Care Providers, Adult Detention Centers, and Community Stakeholders

  27. HIGHLIGHTS: BEXAR COUNTY MODEL • Tools/Resources • Crisis Intervention Team Training (CIT); >50 percent of law enforcement officers currently trained • Deputy Mobile Outreach Team (DMOT) - one MH professional and two deputy sheriffs • Crisis Care Center (MH services) • Restoration Center (SA services) • Services – Booking to Court Appearance to Probation, Jail/Prison to Release • At Release, Coordinated Care – Genesis House Program • Intensive Case Management, Psychiatric Services and Rehabilitation for Offenders on Parole/Probation

  28. HIGHLIGHTS: OUTCOMES AND COSTS • ~ 13,200 Individuals Diverted (from Jails/Prisons, ERs and Homeless Shelters) Annually • Cost Savings • Jails: ~ $65 M Annually • Cost Savings Emergency Rooms: ~ $52 M Annually • 2003 Texas Jail Standards Commission Advised Bexar County Jail Would Need 1,000 New Beds; Today the Jail Currently Has 900 Empty Beds w/o Expansion

  29. REENTRY

  30. REENTRY CHALLENGES • 9 Million Individuals Cycle Through Jails Each Year • > 700,000 Prison Offenders Reenter Communities Annually • 2/3 State Prisoners Rearrested Within 3 Years Of Release • Reentering Offenders Represent: • ¼ of general population living with HIV/AIDS • Almost 1/3 of those with Hep C • Almost 40 percent of people with TB

  31. REENTRY: KEY ISSUES Employment: Incarceration decreases annual employment by > 2 months and yearly earnings by 40 percent Homelessness: Direct relationship between incarceration and homelessness; challenges in securing housing upon reentry Education: > 40 percent of prison and jail inmates lack a high school diploma or GED compared w/ 18 percent general population Social Connection & Treatment: Uncertainty about Parole, Housing Arrangements, Employment, Family Reunification, Health/BH Care as Well as How to Function on Outside Can Elevate Stress and Trigger/Exasperate M/SUD Conditions

  32. ATTORNEY GENERAL’S REENTRY COUNCIL Cabinet-Level Council Led by AG Identify Research And EBP To Advance Reentry And Community Safety Identify Federal Policy Opportunities and Barriers to Improving Outcomes Promote Federal Policy and Practice Change to Improve Well-being of Formerly Incarcerated Individuals and Their Families Support Initiatives in Education, Employment, Housing, Health , Faith, BH Treatment Coordinate Messaging and Communications Re Prisoner Reentry Removing Barriers to Employment, Access to Benefits Such As TANF, Food Assistance, Health Care, Etc.

  33. CHANGING THE CONVERSATION

  34. A BOLDER VISION? • Can We Imagine: • A generation without one new case of trauma-related mental or substance use disorder? • A generation without a death by suicide? • A generation without one person being jailed or living without a home because they have an addiction or mental illness? • A generation without one youth being bullied or rejected because they are LGBT? • A generation in which no one in recovery struggles to find a job?

  35. SAMHSA’S VISION • A Nation that Acts on the Knowledge that: • Behavioral health is essential to health • Prevention works • Treatment is effective • People recover A nation/community free of substance abuse and mental illness and fully capable of addressing behavioral health issues that arise from events or physical conditions

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